NCERT Solutions for Class 12 Geography Chapter 2: Human Settlements (NCERT 2026–27)

These Class 12 Geography Chapter 2 solutions cover Human Settlements from the textbook India: People and Economy. The chapter explains what a human settlement is, the basic differences between rural and urban settlements, the four major types of rural settlements in India (clustered, semi-clustered, hamleted and dispersed), the evolution of towns (ancient, medieval and modern), the trend and level of urbanisation, and the functional classification of towns and cities. Below you get step-by-step answers to every NCERT exercise question, plus extra practice, MCQs, Assertion–Reason questions and FAQs — all written in CBSE exam-ready style for the 2026–27 session.

Class: 12 Subject: Geography Book: India: People and Economy Chapter: 2 (Unit II) Topic: Human Settlements Session: 2026–27

Class 12 Geography Chapter 2 – Overview

A human settlement is a cluster of dwellings of any type or size where human beings live, with people grouping together and apportioning some territory as their economic support-base. Settlements range from a small hamlet to a metropolitan city; as size grows, the economic character, social structure, ecology and technology of the settlement change. Rural settlements are small and sparsely spaced and depend on land-based primary activities, while urban settlements are fewer but larger, compact, and specialise in secondary and tertiary activities. The chapter classifies Indian rural settlements into four types — clustered, semi-clustered, hamleted and dispersed — based on the extent of built-up area and inter-house distance, shaped by physical, cultural-ethnic and security factors. It then traces the evolution of towns (ancient, medieval and modern), reviews the trend of urbanisation in India (31.16% urban in 2011), and gives a functional classification of towns — administrative, industrial, transport, commercial, mining, garrison, educational, religious/cultural and tourist towns — noting that growing cities tend to become multi-functional.

Key Concepts & Terms

Human settlement: a cluster of dwellings of any type or size where human beings live; the process involves the grouping of people and the apportioning of territory as their resource base.

Rural settlement: a small, sparsely spaced settlement that derives its basic economic needs from land-based primary activities (agriculture, etc.); social relations are intimate and people are less mobile.

Urban settlement: a fewer-but-larger, compact settlement specialising in secondary (manufacturing) and tertiary (services) activities; cities act as nodes of economic growth serving their rural hinterland; way of life is complex and social relations are formal.

Factors of rural settlement patterns: (i) physical features — terrain, altitude, climate, availability of water; (ii) cultural and ethnic factors — social structure, caste, religion; (iii) security factors — defence against thefts and robberies.

Clustered (agglomerated/nucleated) settlement: a compact, closely built-up area of houses with the living area distinct from surrounding farms, often forming a recognisable geometric shape (rectangular, radial, linear); common in fertile alluvial plains and the north-east, and in areas needing defence or water economy (Bundelkhand, Nagaland, Rajasthan).

Semi-clustered (fragmented) settlement: results from clustering in a restricted area of an otherwise dispersed settlement, or from the fragmentation of a large compact village; the dominant community occupies the centre and the weaker sections settle on the flanks; common in the Gujarat plain and parts of Rajasthan.

Hamleted settlement: a settlement fragmented into several physically separated units sharing a common name (locally called panna, para, palli, nagla, dhani); motivated by social and ethnic factors; common in the middle and lower Ganga plain, Chhattisgarh and the lower Himalayan valleys.

Dispersed (isolated) settlement: isolated huts or hamlets of a few huts in remote forests, on hills or on slopes, caused by fragmented terrain and a limited habitable land-resource base; common in Meghalaya, Uttarakhand, Himachal Pradesh and Kerala.

Evolution of towns: Indian towns are classified by their period of origin as ancient (over 2000 years old, e.g. Varanasi, Prayagraj, Patna, Madurai), medieval (fort towns of principalities, e.g. Delhi, Hyderabad, Jaipur, Lucknow, Agra, Nagpur) and modern (developed by the British/Europeans, e.g. Surat, the Mumbai–Chennai–Kolkata nodes, and post-independence towns like Chandigarh and Bhilai).

Census definition of an urban settlement (1991): a place that has a municipality, corporation, cantonment board or notified town area committee; OR has a minimum population of 5,000, at least 75% of male workers in non-agricultural pursuits, and a density of at least 400 persons per sq km.

Level of urbanisation: the percentage of urban population to total population; India’s level was 31.16% in 2011, still low compared with developed countries.

Functional classification: grouping towns by their dominant/specialised function — administrative, industrial, transport, commercial, mining, garrison/cantonment, educational, religious/cultural and tourist towns; large cities eventually become multi-functional.

NCERT Exercise — Full Solutions

All questions below are reproduced verbatim from the NCERT textbook’s end-of-chapter Exercises. Answers are original and written in exam-ready style.

1. Choose the right answers of the following from the given options.

(i) Which one of the following towns is NOT located on a river bank? (a) Agra    (b) Bhopal    (c) Patna    (d) Kolkata

ANSWER (b) Bhopal. Agra lies on the Yamuna, Patna on the Ganga and Kolkata on the Hooghly, but Bhopal is a lake city — it grew around the Upper and Lower Lakes, not on a river bank.

(ii) Which one of the following is NOT the part of the definition of a town as per the census of India? (a) Population density of 400 persons per sq km. (b) Presence of municipality, corporation, etc. (c) More than 75% of the population engaged in primary sector. (d) Population size of more than 5,000 persons.

ANSWER (c) More than 75% of the population engaged in primary sector. The census definition requires at least 75% of male workers to be engaged in non-agricultural (non-primary) pursuits, not the primary sector — so this option does not belong to the definition.

(iii) In which one of the following environments does one expect the presence of dispersed rural settlements? (a) Alluvial plains of Ganga (b) Arid and semi-arid regions of Rajasthan (c) Lower valleys of Himalayas (d) Forests and hills in north-east

ANSWER (d) Forests and hills in north-east. Dispersed or isolated settlements appear as isolated huts or small hamlets in remote jungles or on small hills with farms on the slopes, where the fragmented terrain and limited habitable land prevent compact villages.

2. Answer the following questions in about 30 words.

(i) What are garrisson towns? What is their function?

ANSWER Garrison (cantonment) towns are settlements that emerged to serve defence and military needs. Their main function is to house armed forces and military establishments. Examples include Ambala, Jalandhar, Mhow, Babina and Udhampur.

(ii) What are the main factors for the location of villages in desert regions?

ANSWER In desert and arid regions the chief factor is the availability of water. Scarcity of water forces people to live in compact, clustered settlements near water sources for maximum utilisation of the limited water, as in Rajasthan.

3. Answer the following questions in about 150 words.

(i) Discuss the features of different types of rural settlements. What are the factors responsible for the settlement patterns in different physical environments?

ANSWER Indian rural settlements are of four types based on the extent of built-up area and inter-house distance: 1. Clustered (agglomerated/nucleated): a compact, closely built-up area of houses whose living area is distinct from surrounding farms, often forming a geometric shape (rectangular, radial, linear). Found in fertile alluvial plains and the north-east, and in defence- or water-scarce areas (Bundelkhand, Nagaland, Rajasthan). 2. Semi-clustered (fragmented): clustering restricted to one part of an otherwise dispersed area, or fragmentation of a large compact village; the dominant landowning community occupies the centre and weaker sections settle on the flanks. Common in the Gujarat plain and parts of Rajasthan. 3. Hamleted: the village splits into several physically separated units (panna, para, palli, nagla, dhani) sharing one name, driven by social/ethnic factors. Found in the middle and lower Ganga plain, Chhattisgarh and lower Himalayan valleys. 4. Dispersed (isolated): isolated huts or tiny hamlets in remote forests, hills and slopes, caused by fragmented terrain. Found in Meghalaya, Uttarakhand, Himachal Pradesh and Kerala. Factors responsible: (i) physical features — nature of terrain, altitude, climate and availability of water; (ii) cultural and ethnic factors — social structure, caste and religion; and (iii) security factors — defence against thefts and robberies. Together these decide whether settlements cluster or disperse.

(ii) Can one imagine the presence of only one-function town? Why do the cities become multi-functional?

ANSWER In reality it is difficult to imagine a town that performs only a single function. Towns are classified by their dominant or specialised function — administrative, industrial, transport, commercial, mining, educational, religious or tourist — but every town also performs a number of other functions alongside the main one. So a ‘single-function’ town is only a simplification for study; in practice no town survives on one function alone. Cities become multi-functional because they are dynamic and constantly growing. As a specialised city expands into a metropolis, fresh activities are drawn to it — industry, business, administration, transport and services all develop together. These functions get so intertwined that the city can no longer be placed in any single functional class. For example, an old administrative or commercial centre adds industries, educational institutions, transport hubs and trade as its population and economy grow, turning it into a multi-functional metropolis.

Extra Practice Questions

Short Answer Type Questions

Q1. Define a human settlement.

ANSWERA human settlement is a cluster of dwellings of any type or size where human beings live. The process involves the grouping of people and the apportioning of some territory or area as their economic support-base or resource base.

Q2. State two basic differences between rural and urban settlements.

ANSWER(i) Rural settlements depend on land-based primary economic activities, whereas urban settlements depend on the processing of raw materials, manufacturing and services. (ii) In rural areas people are less mobile and social relations are intimate, while in urban areas the way of life is complex and social relations are formal.

Q3. What are hamleted settlements? Where are they found?

ANSWERHamleted settlements are villages fragmented into several physically separated units that share a common name, locally called panna, para, palli, nagla or dhani. This segmentation is usually motivated by social and ethnic factors. They are common in the middle and lower Ganga plain, Chhattisgarh and the lower valleys of the Himalayas.

Q4. Name the three categories of Indian towns based on their period of evolution, with one example each.

ANSWER(i) Ancient towns — over 2000 years old, e.g. Varanasi; (ii) Medieval towns — fort towns of principalities and kingdoms, e.g. Delhi or Jaipur; (iii) Modern towns — developed by the British and other Europeans, e.g. Surat or Chandigarh (post-independence).

Q5. What is meant by the level of urbanisation? What was it in India in 2011?

ANSWERThe level of urbanisation is measured as the percentage of urban population to the total population. In India in 2011 it was 31.16 per cent, which is quite low compared with developed countries, and the growth rate of urbanisation has slowed during the last two decades.

Long Answer Type Questions

Q1. Trace the evolution of towns in India through the ancient, medieval and modern periods.

ANSWERTowns have flourished in India since prehistoric times — Harappa and Mohenjodaro existed during the Indus Valley civilisation. On the basis of their period of origin, Indian towns are classified into three groups. Ancient towns have a historical background spanning over 2000 years; most developed as religious and cultural centres, such as Varanasi, Prayag (Prayagraj), Pataliputra (Patna) and Madurai. Medieval towns, about a hundred of the existing ones, have roots in the medieval period and developed mainly as headquarters of principalities and kingdoms — fort towns built on the ruins of ancient towns, such as Delhi, Hyderabad, Jaipur, Lucknow, Agra and Nagpur. Modern towns were developed by the British and other Europeans, who first set up trading ports like Surat, Daman, Goa and Pondicherry, then consolidated three principal nodes — Mumbai, Chennai and Kolkata — built in the British style, and added administrative centres and hill-town resorts. Industrial towns such as Jamshedpur evolved after 1850, and after independence many administrative capitals (Chandigarh, Bhubaneswar, Gandhinagar, Dispur) and industrial centres (Durgapur, Bhilai, Sindri, Barauni) and satellite towns (Ghaziabad, Gurugram) grew rapidly.

Q2. Explain the functional classification of towns in India with suitable examples.

ANSWERApart from acting as central or nodal places, many towns specialise in particular functions and are classified by their dominant function. Administrative towns support administrative headquarters of a higher order, e.g. Chandigarh, New Delhi, Bhopal, Shillong, Guwahati and Gandhinagar. Industrial towns have industries as their prime motive force, e.g. Mumbai, Salem, Coimbatore, Jamshedpur and Bhilai. Transport towns may be ports engaged in export–import (Kandla, Cochin, Kozhikode, Vishakhapatnam) or hubs of inland transport (Agra, Itarsi, Katni). Commercial towns specialise in trade and commerce, e.g. Kolkata, Saharanpur and Satna. Mining towns develop in mineral-rich areas, e.g. Raniganj, Jharia, Digboi and Singrauli. Garrison (cantonment) towns serve defence needs, e.g. Ambala, Jalandhar and Udhampur. Educational towns have grown into major campus towns, e.g. Roorkee, Aligarh and Pilani. Religious and cultural towns like Varanasi, Mathura, Amritsar, Tirupati and Haridwar gained prominence for their significance, while tourist towns such as Nainital, Mussoorie, Shimla and Mount Abu attract visitors. Because cities are dynamic, specialised cities eventually become multi-functional.

Q3. Describe the four types of rural settlements found in India and the factors that shape them.

ANSWERRural settlements in India are classified, on the basis of the extent of built-up area and inter-house distance, into four types. Clustered settlements are compact, closely built-up areas of houses with the living area distinct from surrounding farms and a recognisable geometric pattern; they occur in fertile alluvial plains, the north-east, and in areas needing defence (Bundelkhand, Nagaland) or water economy (Rajasthan). Semi-clustered or fragmented settlements result from clustering in a restricted part of an otherwise dispersed area or from the fragmentation of a large village, with the dominant community at the centre and weaker sections on the flanks (Gujarat plain, parts of Rajasthan). Hamleted settlements are split into several physically separated units with a common name (panna, para, palli, nagla, dhani) due to social and ethnic factors (middle and lower Ganga plain, Chhattisgarh, lower Himalayan valleys). Dispersed settlements appear as isolated huts or tiny hamlets in remote forests, hills and slopes (Meghalaya, Uttarakhand, Himachal Pradesh, Kerala). These patterns are governed by three sets of factors: physical features (terrain, altitude, climate, water availability), cultural and ethnic factors (social structure, caste, religion) and security factors (defence against theft and robbery).

MCQs & Assertion–Reason

1. A human settlement is best defined as:

(a) any open piece of land    (b) a cluster of dwellings of any type or size where humans live    (c) only a metropolitan city    (d) farmland without houses

2. Rural settlements mainly derive their economic needs from:

(a) manufacturing    (b) services    (c) land-based primary activities    (d) trade and commerce

3. Which of the following is NOT a type of rural settlement in India?

(a) Clustered    (b) Semi-clustered    (c) Hamleted    (d) Cantonment

4. The terms panna, para, palli and dhani are associated with which settlement type?

(a) Clustered    (b) Hamleted    (c) Dispersed    (d) Semi-clustered

5. Dispersed settlements are commonly found in:

(a) the fertile Ganga plain    (b) Meghalaya, Uttarakhand and Kerala    (c) the Gujarat plain    (d) coastal Tamil Nadu

6. Which of the following is an example of an ancient town?

(a) Chandigarh    (b) Jaipur    (c) Varanasi    (d) Jamshedpur

7. The British consolidated their hold around three principal urban nodes, namely:

(a) Delhi, Agra and Lucknow    (b) Mumbai, Chennai and Kolkata    (c) Surat, Daman and Goa    (d) Patna, Prayagraj and Varanasi

8. The level of urbanisation in India in 2011 was about:

(a) 17.29%    (b) 25.71%    (c) 31.16%    (d) 48.00%

9. Kandla, Cochin and Vishakhapatnam are examples of:

(a) administrative towns    (b) transport (port) towns    (c) mining towns    (d) educational towns

10. Jamshedpur, an industrial town, is cited as an example of a town based on modern industries that evolved after:

(a) 1750    (b) 1800    (c) 1850    (d) 1947

Answer key: 1-(b), 2-(c), 3-(d), 4-(b), 5-(b), 6-(c), 7-(b), 8-(c), 9-(b), 10-(c).

For each Assertion–Reason question, choose: (A) Both true and the Reason correctly explains the Assertion; (B) Both true but the Reason is not the correct explanation; (C) Assertion true, Reason false; (D) Assertion false, Reason true.

A-R 1. Assertion: In Rajasthan, rural settlements are often compact and clustered.

Reason: Scarcity of water necessitates compact settlement for maximum utilisation of the available water.

A-R 2. Assertion: Urban settlements specialise in secondary and tertiary activities.

Reason: Cities act as nodes of economic growth, providing goods and services to their rural hinterland.

A-R 3. Assertion: Bhopal is located on a river bank.

Reason: Bhopal grew around its Upper and Lower Lakes rather than along a river.

A-R 4. Assertion: A purely single-function town is hard to find in reality.

Reason: Every town performs a number of functions even though it is classified by its dominant function.

A-R 5. Assertion: Dispersed settlements are found in fragmented hilly and forested terrain.

Reason: The fragmented nature of the terrain and a limited habitable land-resource base cause extreme dispersion.

Answer key: 1-(A), 2-(A), 3-(D), 4-(A), 5-(A).

Exam Tips & Common Mistakes

How to score full marks in this chapter

Memorise the four types of rural settlements with one defining feature, one regional example and the three sets of factors (physical, cultural-ethnic, security) — this is the most frequently asked long-answer topic. Learn the census definition of a town precisely (note that it requires 75% of male workers in non-agricultural work, density 400/sq km, population 5,000). For the evolution of towns, keep ready one example each for ancient, medieval and modern towns, and remember the Mumbai–Chennai–Kolkata British nodes. For functional classification, give the function plus two named examples for each class, and always add that growing cities become multi-functional.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Writing that the census requires 75% of workers in the primary sector — it is the non-agricultural sector.
  • Calling Bhopal a riverside town — it is a lake city, not on a river bank.
  • Confusing semi-clustered (one cluster within a dispersed area) with hamleted (several separate units with one name).
  • Mixing up examples — e.g. listing Jaipur as ancient (it is medieval) or Chandigarh as medieval (it is modern/post-independence).
  • Forgetting to mention the three factors (physical, cultural-ethnic, security) when explaining settlement patterns.
  • Stating that single-function towns are common — in reality every town performs several functions.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Chapter 2 of Class 12 Geography (India: People and Economy) about?

Chapter 2, Human Settlements, explains what a human settlement is, the differences between rural and urban settlements, the four types of rural settlements in India (clustered, semi-clustered, hamleted and dispersed), the evolution of towns (ancient, medieval, modern), the level of urbanisation and the functional classification of towns and cities.

What are the four types of rural settlements in India?

The four types are clustered (agglomerated/nucleated), semi-clustered (fragmented), hamleted, and dispersed (isolated). They are distinguished by the extent of the built-up area and the inter-house distance, and are shaped by physical, cultural-ethnic and security factors.

What is the census definition of an urban settlement in India?

As per the Census of India (1991), an urban settlement is a place that has a municipality, corporation, cantonment board or notified town area committee, OR has a minimum population of 5,000, at least 75% of male workers engaged in non-agricultural pursuits, and a density of at least 400 persons per square kilometre.

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